Page loaded successfully. Showing biography for Sonja Blomdahl.
Sonja Blomdahl BIOGRAPHY
Born 1952. Known for: Blown glass sculpture.
Known for her "double bubble" technique, Sonja Blomdahl makes spherical and hour glass shaped vessels. She began working in glass in 1972 at the Massachusetts College of Art Boston and then studied... Read full biography
Known for her "double bubble" technique, Sonja Blomdahl makes spherical and hour glass shaped vessels. She began working in glass in 1972 at the Massachusetts College of Art Boston and then studied at Sweden's Orrefors Glass School. She then became Dan Dailey's teaching assistant at the Pilchuck... Read full biography
Known for her "double bubble" technique, Sonja Blomdahl makes spherical and hour glass shaped vessels. She began working in glass in 1972 at the Massachusetts College of Art Boston and then studied at Sweden's Orrefors Glass School. She then became Dan Dailey's teaching assistant at the Pilchuck Glass School in Seattle, Washington. Source:. Southwest Art, 11/1997
Known for her "double bubble" technique, Sonja Blomdahl makes spherical and hour glass shaped vessels. She began working in glass in 1972 at the Massachusetts College of Art Boston and then studied at Sweden's Orrefors Glass School. She then became Dan Dailey's teaching assistant at the Pilchuck Glass School in Seattle, Washington. Source:. Southwest Art, 11/1997
Known for her "double bubble" technique, Sonja Blomdahl makes spherical and hour glass shaped vessels. She began working in glass in 1972 at the Massachusetts College of Art Boston and then studied at Sweden's Orrefors Glass School. She then became Dan Dailey's teaching assistant at the Pilchuck Glass School in Seattle, Washington. Source:. Southwest Art, 11/1997
Artist Biography
Biography page for Sonja Blomdahl ((Born 1952)), known for Blown glass sculpture. Showing 1 biographical entries and 0 sample artworks.
Sonja Blomdahl - Artist Info
About Sonja Blomdahl
Biography
Known for her "double bubble" technique, Sonja Blomdahl makes spherical and hour glass shaped vessels.
She began working in glass in 1972 at the Massachusetts College of Art Boston and then studied at Sweden's Orrefors Glass School. She then became Dan Dailey's teaching assistant at the Pilchuck Glass School in Seattle, Washington.
Source:
Southwest Art, 11/1997